Official Publication of Wayne State University Athletic Department

Winter 2019

HALLOF FAME 2019 INDUCTEES 3

SPONSORED BY:

DETROIT DOWNTOWN RIVERFRONT

DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS Rob Fournier, esq

EDITOR Jeff Weiss, Senior Associate A.D./Media Relations

GRAPHIC DESIGNER Amanda St. Juliana, Creative Services Coordinator

WRITER Cameron Weidenthaler, Assistant Sports Information Director 6

PHOTOGRAPHERS Mark Hicks, WestSide Photographic Jose Juaez Michael Dubicki Jason Clark

PRINTING Whitlock Business Systems Madison Heights, Mich.

SEND CHANGE OF ADDRESS INFORMATION TO: Office of Development 12 Wayne State University Athletics 5101 John C. Lodge, 101 Matthaei TABLE OF CONTENTS , MI 48202 [email protected] From the Athletic Director 1-2 Anthony Bass & Troy Burrell, Hall of Fame Inductees 3 The Warrior Within is compiled and edited by the Eric Johnson & Ian Larkin, Hall of Fame Inductees 4 WSU Sports Information Office. Carly Sevald & Ashley (Corriveau) Weaver, Hall of Fame Inductees 5 Feature Story: Fencing Dynasty 6-7 Top 100 for 2017 8-9 FOLLOW US Athletic Director's Academic Honor Roll 10

Coach's Academic Honor Roll 11 WSUATHLETICS.COM Athletics Adopts 19 Families 12 Toth Academic All-American, 2019 Football Schedule 13 Hall of Fame Inductees List (1976-2019) 14-15 "W" Week Information, Compliance Corner 16 Our Most Loyal Fan By Rob Fournier, esq, Director of Athletics

Some called him our “most loyal fan.” Lord knows he was our oldest. My friend, Paul Andrews, passed away recently at the age of 95. I met him Paul Andrews was not boastful about all he had years ago when he was a youthful 76. He was already a wealth of history and memories of Wayne State athletics. accomplished. Most people who get things done are like that. His introduction to Wayne State football came in 1941 when the school’s official name was simply Wayne. And it wasn’t like his life-long passion was the result of a celebratory introduction to football – the team scored all of four touchdowns in a 2 -6 season. But the “ride” was on … and he was hooked. He went from Keyworth Stadium to Tartar Field (1954) and eventually, to Adams Field. Through bright crisp fall afternoons to rainy, chilly contests where fans were few, Paul Andrews kept watch as if a sentinel on duty.

Paul Andrews missed a few seasons in the early 40’s as his time was spent in the Pacific Theatre as part of the Greatest Generation’s commitment to save freedom… and the world. The highs and lows of athletics would be measured in comparison to that sacrifice and that of others. It made the antics of football seem normal and serene. He had witnessed death and the worst of man. Paul Andrews had perspective.

Paul Andrews was not boastful about all he had accomplished. Most people who get things done are like that. As the first-ever Associate Vice President for Alumni Relations at Wayne State, he met a lot of people over the years. The school could not have had a better ambassador. Right until his passing, he was the consummate green and gold advocate. Never a harsh word, never a criticism. There would always be another game, another opportunity, a chance to better the outcome. Athletics mirrored his vision of life. There might be a lesson there for all of us.

His compassion was more than a Saturday afternoon athletic event. The story is told that when his beloved wife Shirley of 63 years (who predeceased him) had once come home with some paint to refresh the kitchen, he expressed his immediate disdain for the color scheme. Paul was not a handyman, but when Shirley showed him her selected color choice (a variation of pink), he insisted the paint be returned. In Paul’s mind, there were only two acceptable colors – green or gold (or both). To this day the kitchen remains a sunshine yellow. And coincidentally, Shirley painted it too. Paul Andrews speaking at the Athletics 2014 Hall of Fame celebration.

Continued on page 2

LETTER FROM THE AD 2019 WINTER WARRIOR WITHIN 1 President M. Roy Wilson and Paul Andrews at a Warrior Football game. I remember the first time I met Paul. It was in a large conference room on the fourth floor of the student . He was part of a sixteen- Paul Andrews saw the best in Wayne State even when member search committee to select a new athletic director. As the it wasn’t always on display. invariable questions followed: Can you get us on radio, what about a television package, can you raise “significant” dollars, what do you think of the new nickname “Warriors”, he sat affably and intently. I am sure his Head Coach Joel Mason who often lamented, “I have to drive 16 miles for perspective of WSU Athletics was quite different than those asking the a home game.” questions. You might say, he was a little more realistic – he had seen the “product” first-hand. Paul Andrews saw the best in Wayne State even when it wasn’t always on display. Once his son-in-law asked him if he would like to attend the Michigan He served on our Hall of Fame selection committee, and the combination – Michigan State game for which he had four tickets which seemed particularly of Paul and Fred Mulhauser was always entertaining. Two contemporaries significant as a family outing since one son had gone to MSU and the other to back in their familiar positions. He was our M.C. at the Hall of Fame Michigan. What the son-in-law thought would be immediate approval, was luncheon, and when others suggested to me it might be time to replace instead met with a demure. How could he attend? You see, Wayne State had him in that role, I told them that Paul would let us know when that time a home football game that same afternoon. Now somewhat incredulous, he was right. A sentential knows when to leave his post. He travelled with us asked again. No, Paul Andrews was not going to miss a Wayne State football to the football national championship game in 2011. Admittedly, he didn’t game. Hmmm…now what is that you said about being the most loyal fan? see that coming in 1941. When he relinquished his driving privileges at 93, he always found a neighbor or family member to get him to the game. And Paul Andrews was a “throw-back” to a generation that said thank you and he wrote checks to support his athletic passion. wrote notes. He would often call or pen a letter regarding a speech or article I had done that he enjoyed or had “nudged” a memory. I will miss He drove from high school to high school when Wayne State did not have that… and I will miss Paul Andrews. All of Wayne State should miss Paul a home gym and used to jokingly recall the story of former Andrews too. After all, he was our most loyal fan.

2 2019 WINTER WARRIOR WITHIN LETTER FROM THE AD HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES 2019

ANTHONY BASS, BASEBALL TROY BURRELL, FOOTBALL Anthony Bass was a three-year baseball letterwinner (2006-08), who was the 2007- Troy Burrell was a four-year football letterwinner (2008-11), who concluded his 08 WSU Male Student-Athlete of the Year after helping the baseball squad to the collegiate career by playing in the 2011 National Championship game. NCAA Regional Championship game. He set the WSU career receptions record (187) and finished second in school history in He finished his career ranked third all-time at Wayne State in victories (21), second both receiving yards (3,132) and touchdown catches (27). Burrell was fifth in average in strikeout/walk ratio (3.38), tied for third in winning percentage (.700), fourth in yards per reception at 16.75 ypc, eighth in career touchdowns (28), ninth in all-purpose strikeouts (206), seventh in starts (33), eighth in innings pitched (213.0), and tied for yards (3,299) and 10th in scoring (168 points). 10th in complete games (14). Burrell concluded his career with a 38-game reception streak and recorded 12 100-yard Bass was named to the Rawlings/ABCA All-America First Team and the NCBWA All- receiving games. He was a two-time First Team All-GLIAC selection who earned All- America Third Team after his junior campaign in which he was voted Rawlings/ABCA Region accolades from Hansen’s Football Gazette each of his final two seasons. All-North Central Region Pitcher of the Year following his selection as GLIAC Pitcher of the Year. He went 10-3 with a 2.10 ERA and 100 strikeouts in 85. 2 innings and As a senior, Burrell was voted to the All-America Second Team by Daktronics, Hansen's tied the single-season school record for victories. Bass also totaled the fourth-most Football Gazette and D2Football.com and was named to the Associated Press Little strikeouts and fifth-most innings in WSU history, while compiling seven complete All-America Third Team. In 2011, he set WSU single-season records for receptions (87) games and two shutouts. and receiving yards (1,633) and shared WSU’s Offensive Most Valuable Player award. As a senior, he was the inaugural recipient of the Cortez Smith Award. A team co-captain in 2008, he posted back-to-back complete game postseason victories against Findlay in the GLIAC Tournament and versus St. Joseph's in the first He became WSU’s all-time receptions leader in the NCAA Regional Championship round of the NCAA Regional. Bass was named to the NCAA All-Tournament Team. game win at Minnesota Duluth with 11 catches for 163 yards and two touchdowns. Burrell garnered a game-high 75 receiving yards in the national semifinal victory at In 2007, Bass led the Warrior pitching staff (and tied for GLIAC lead) with eight Winston-Salem. victories and finished second in the GLIAC in innings pitched (77.1), while ranking sixth in strikeouts (64) during the regular season. His 3.38 ERA was third-best in In 2010, he ranked second in the GLIAC in receiving yards (81.8 ypg), and fifth in the conference. Bass made a team-high 15 appearances (12 starts) and posted five receptions as he totaled 57 catches for 900 yards and six touchdowns. complete games along with an 8-3 record. He was selected to the ALL-GLIAC First As a sophomore, Burrell led WSU in receptions (25), receiving yards (458), touchdown Team as a starting pitcher. catches (4) and average yards per catch (18.3), which ranked second in the GLIAC. In his freshman campaign, Bass made 11 appearances (9 starts) and finished third on A four-time GLIAC All-Academic Team honoree, Burrell twice received the football the team in innings pitched (50.0), while compiling a 3-3 record with a save. program’s Scholar-Athlete Award (2009 and 2011). He was on the Academic Honor Roll A native of Trenton, Bass earned his degree in Management Information Systems. He all 10 terms, including four semesters with at least a 3.5 term GPA. A three-time CoSIDA was on the Academic Honor Roll twice, including his last full-time semester when he Academic All-District nominee, Burrell received membership into the National Football had over a 3.75 GPA. Foundation Hampshire Honor Society. He was the highest-drafted baseball player in school history going in the fifth round A native of Port Huron, Burrell spent time on the Detroit Lions practice squad after of the 2008 Major League Draft to the San Diego Padres. Over the last 11 years, he earning his bachelor’s degree in Kinesiology in 2012. has pitched in 147 major league games plus another 180 in the minor leagues. Bass has a career MLB ERA of 4.51 in 299.1 innings.

HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES 2019 WINTER WARRIOR WITHIN 3 HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES 2019

ERIC JOHNSON, GOLF IAN LARKIN, BASKETBALL Eric Johnson was a four-year golf letterwinner (2007-13), who battled through two Ian Larkin was a four-year basketball letterwinner (2009-13), who became just the third medical redshirts to become the 2013 GLIAC Golfer of the Year. player in program history to record 1,000 points, 500 rebounds and 100 blocked shots. As a true freshman in 2007-08, Johnson competed in all 14 events with a scoring He concluded his collegiate career first in three- percentage (46.3), average of 76.30, which included a tie-for-14th at the NCAA Super Regional (225). fourth in blocked shots (115), seventh in games played (108), 13th in minutes played (2,625), 14th in field goals made (390), 15th in rebounds (550), 17th in points He missed his entire second year due to an injury, but rebounded in 2009-10 to (1,022) and 19th in three-pointers made (68). Larkin, who had 10 games of at least receive Second Team All-GLIAC recognition. He was one of two Warriors to play in 20 points among his 50 games scoring in double figures, helped lead WSU to a 44-16 all 32 rounds as the squad advanced to the NCAA Championships for the second league record over his final three seasons. consecutive year after a runner-up finish at the Super Regionals. A Second Team NABC All-Midwest Region selection as a senior, Larkin was also voted Johnson tied-for-second at the GLIAC Championships with a 216 (72-71-73), and had the WSU Male Student-Athlete of the Year for 2012-13. He had three double-doubles two other top seven finishes during the regular season. He carded a season-low 68 as a senior and led the squad in scoring (371), field goals made (140), rebounds (168) in the opening round of the NCAA Super Regional. and blocked shots (35). In 2010-11, Johnson again earned Second Team All-GLIAC accolades. He finished Larkin received First Team All-GLIAC honors as a senior after being recognized on the second at the league championships with a 219 helping the Warriors tie for the All-GLIAC Second Team as a junior. He started all 54 games over his final two seasons. league title. He then placed third at the NCAA Super Regionals (214/70-74-70) to qualify as an individual for the NCAA Championships, where he finished tied-for- In his junior campaign, Larkin led the GLIAC in three-point field goal percentage 32nd (225). His 214 score at the NCAA Super Regionals was two strokes off the (57.1), and was fourth in both field goal percentage (57.9) and blocked shots (43), school record for 54 holes. while ranking 14th in scoring (13.4 PPG) and 20th in rebounding (5.4 RPG). He received another medical redshirt (shoulder injury) for the 2011-12 academic year He made ESPN SportsCenter’s Top 10 plays as a sophomore for his dunk vs. Michigan after being able to only play in the first event. Tech. His dunk also appeared on ABC’s Winner’s Bracket Show. Larkin nearly had a double-double in the GLIAC Semifinal win over Findlay with 10 points and eight In his final season, Johnson was a First Team All-GLIAC selection after playing in every rebounds. He tallied 10 points and grabbed seven rebounds in the opening round of round and finishing with a career-best 74.72 scoring average. His best round of 68 the NCAA Tournament. came in the first Regional event at Brighton Dale Links. He played in the final 24 games of his redshirt freshman season after being medically His other top performances included a tie-for-second at the Tiffin Kyle Ryman cleared (he received a medical redshirt at Detroit in 2008-09). Larkin finished among Memorial, a tie-for-fifth at the second Regional event, a tie-for-sixth at the first the GLIAC leaders in blocked shots during the 2009-10 season. Regional event and a tie-for-fifth at the GLIAC Championships. A three-year member of the GLIAC All-Academic Excellence Team, Larkin was a During his career, the three-year team co-captain had three top-five finishes at the two-time CoSIDA Academic All-District selection as well as earning a 2012 GLIAC GLIAC Championships, and two top-14 finishes at the NCAA Super Regionals. Commissioner’s Award for academic and athletic success. A native of Marquette, Johnson earned his degree in Public Relations. The Detroit native earned WSU Academic Honor Roll recognition all eight terms, including six semesters of at least a 3.5 term GPA. After receiving his bachelor’s degree in Management, Larkin graduated from the WSU Law School in May of 2018.

4 2019 WINTER WARRIOR WITHIN HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES 2019

CARLY SEVALD, DIVING ASHLEY (CORRIVEAU) WEAVER, SWIMMING Carly Sevald was a four-year diving letterwinner (2009-13), who was a national Ashley (Corriveau) Weaver was a four-year swimming letterwinner (2009-13), who was champion and an eight-time All-American. a 19-time All-American and won six national titles. After earning First Team (third place on three meter) and Honorable Mention (11th Corriveau received 17 First Team All-American certificates, including being the anchor place on one meter) All-America accolades as a freshman, Sevald received First Team four straight years as a member of the national champion 200 medley relay. All-America honors on both boards as a sophomore finishing sixth (in the three meter) and seventh (in the one meter), respectively. She also won two other national titles as junior (200 free relay and 400 medley relay), which helped the Warriors claim the national team title by a single point. As a junior, Sevald was voted Female Diver of the Meet at the NCAA Championships after becoming the second women’s diving national champion in program history. Corriveau competed all four years at the NCAA Championships in both the 200 free She won the three-meter competition with a score of 503.40. Sevald placed third on relay (never finished lower than third) and the 400 free relay (never finished lower than the one-meter board with a school record score of 496.95. fourth), along with a second-place finish in the 800 free relay (2010), and three top-five finishes in the 400 medley relay. In 2012-13, she finished fourth on the one-meter board and fifth on the three-meter board at the NCAA Championships. She anchored five national championship relays, and swam lead off in the other national championship relay. Sevald earned All-America honors all eight opportunities, with seven of the All- America certificates being First Team. In fact, she never finished lower than sixth on Corriveau was also a First Team All-American in the 100 free with an eighth-place finish the three-meter board at the NCAA Championships. in 2012. Both of her Honorable Mention All-American recognitions were in the 50 free in 2012 and 2013. She won three GLIAC titles (one-meter in both 2012 and 2013, and three-meter in 2011). Sevald had three top-three finishes at the league meet on each board. In addition to the team national championship in 2012, WSU finished second the other three seasons, and won the GLIAC Championship all four years. A two-time CSCAA Scholar All-American First Team recipient, Sevald earned a spot on the WSU Academic Honor Roll all eight semesters, including five terms with at least a Corriveau won six GLIAC titles (three in the 200 medley relay, and one each in the 400 3.5 semester GPA with three of those terms being perfect 4.0 GPAs. medley relay, 400 free relay and 800 free relay). She had 12 top-three finishes in relays during her career, and finished in the top eight in individual races 11 times (four each in Sevald was a three-time GLIAC All-Academic Team honoree including being selected 50 free and 100 free, and three times in the 200 free). to the All-Academic Excellence Team her last two years. In 2011, she was a member of two GLIAC Championship Record Setting Relays (200 A native of Royal Oak, Sevald was voted the WSU Female Student-Athlete of the Medley and 400 Freestyle). Year for 2012-13 after earning Second Team CoSIDA Academic All-America At-Large honors. She earned her bachelor’s degree in Early Childhood Education. A native of Metamora, Mich. (Lapeer East HS), Corriveau earned her degree in Psychology. She was on the Academic Honor Roll five semesters, including two terms with at least a 3.5 GPA. A two-time GLIAC All-Academic honoree, Corriveau also received CSCAA Scholar All-American First Team accolades as a senior. She is married to former WSU swimming letterwinner Cameron Weaver and the couple has a son Wyatt.

HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES 2019 WINTER WARRIOR WITHIN 5 Fencing Team, 1979 A Fencing Dynasty by STEVE KING Indeed, at a school with a lot of really cool sports stories, this might well be The following feature first appeared in the football game program on the coolest. Sept. 15, 2018. What we do know for sure, though, is that it’s literally off the charts. In Once upon a time long ago … an 11-year span from 1975-85, the Warriors won seven – yes, that’s right, seven, as in one more than six and one less than eight! – NCAA Division I Sound like the beginning of a fairy tale? It should, because that’s exactly championships, six of which came in a seven-year stretch in 1979, ’80, ’82, what it is – with one big exception. It’s not make-believe. It’s real – as real ’83, ’84 and ’85. The first one was in 1975. as the souvenir program you’re holding, the moon, the sun and the stars. UCLA became arguably the greatest story – the greatest dynasty – in the But you still might have a hard time believing it, because it doesn’t seem, history of men’s college basketball with 10 titles in 12 years from 1964-75, real, or possible. so then, does that mean that Wayne State 30-40 years ago is arguably the greatest story – the greatest dynasty – in men’s fencing? Think of it this way: Wayne State was once like Hickory High School in the famous movie, “Hoosiers,” only what the Warriors did was not just one shot Let’s take this beyond the WSU campus boundaries. Detroit is a city that has heard ‘round the world, but a bunch of shots –a bunch bigger than you can some of the greatest athletes of all time in a variety of sports, such as Ty Cobb in imagine. baseball, Gordie Howe (hockey), Joe Louis (boxing), Barry Sanders (football) and enough great basketball players, including George Gervin, and Dave At about the same time that the UCLA was dominating basketball, WSU DeBusschere, to fill up several teams. All of those men have been put up onto was dominating another men’s college sport – not in the smaller Division pedestals, and rightfully so, for they are truly special. II, where the school has long resided, but with all the big schools in Division I since everybody is grouped in one class. Though they’ve certainly flown under the radar because the sport isn’t as high-profile, those fencers – Greg Benko (two in foil), Yuri Rabinovich (two, Wayne State has a rich sports tradition, with nearly every program having sabre), Ernest Simon (three, foil), Gil Pezza (two, epee), Neil Hick (sabre), done something very special. And if the measuring stick is national Ettore Bianchi (two, epee) and Stephan Chauvel (foil), all of whom won prominence, then the most special of those programs is men’s fencing. individual national championships during those team title years – deserve

6 2019 WINTER WARRIOR WITHIN A FENCING DYNASTY some pedestals of their own, with unique accolades and praise sent their way. In between all those championships were second-place finishes in 1976 and The term “iconic” needs a broader context, and swath, and WSU fencing has to ’81, and a third-place finish in both 1977 and ’78. In the 15 seasons from be part of it. 1971-85, WSU placed each time, including never lower than third in the final 13 of those years. Just as the greats Cobb, Howe, Louis, and all the rest, may never be duplicated, the same could be said for the WSU fencers. Pezza’s teams were sixth in 1986 and seventh in ’89, after which the NCAA combined men’s and women’s fencing into one team trophy. That made “We were the dominant program in fencing that time. We ruled the whole for quite a squad, because the WSU women, which earned three Division I country. It was really something,” said the 63-year old Pezza, a native of Italy national titles in 1982, ’88 and ’89. and now a retired attorney in the Detroit area who is a WSU Sports Hall of Fame inductee. Fencing accounts for 10 of the 11 national championships captured by Wayne State teams. The only other one came in 2012 in Division II women’s “This doesn’t really happen in fencing, but it did at Wayne State at the time, swimming and diving. because if you were a fencer then, you had a very distinguished place on campus. Everybody knew the success we were having, and they knew us as Pezza took over and coached the combined team to fifth nationally in 1990 and individuals. We got all kinds of proclamations from the state legislators in ninth in ’91, after which Jerzy Radz became coach. Radz has coached it ever since, Lansing for our accomplishments. We also were in demand to give fencing with his teams placing nationally 26 seasons in a row. demonstrations all around the area. If there was a bar mitzvah, we might be getting a call to show up. People wanted to see what fencing was, what it was So, with that success, then, to say that WSU is, in essence a fencing school in all about. It was a lot of fun.” the big picture historically, is entirely accurate.

Fencing success at Wayne State, despite the fact it is obviously headlined by what But, not surprisingly, it is what took place with those seven national happened from 1975-85, certainly isn’t defined totally by that meteoric run. champions won by the men that still draws the most notice, even all these The history of the sport goes back a long way. In fact, the first seeds for fencing years later. excellence were planted decades before, in the first full year of World War II in 1942, when Byron Kreiger (foil) captured the school’s first individual national Part of what made those Wayne State teams so good was the fact that even title. It continued with Bruce Davis, the national champ in foil in 1957 and ’58, the backup fencers were good. “The second fencers at Wayne State would have Bela Szentivanyi (sabre, 1963) and Steve Danosi (sabre, 1974). been No. 1 everywhere else,” Pezza said. “That’s how you built a team back then, with lots of depth. Team-wise, those seeds were first planted in 1947 when WSU placed nationally for first time by finishing ninth. The Tartars, as they were called That depth included some local products such as Detroit Pershing High then, were seventh in 1948 and ninth again in 1951, all under head coach School product Michael Davis, and Jon Zelkowski, an alum of the former Bela de Tuscan. Southfield-Lathrup High School. Both were athletic and played other sports before being turned on to fencing in high school. Then in the 17-year span from 1958-74, head coach Istvan Danosi’s team placed in the top-10 nationally 11 times, including earning a second, two “Our greatest competitions were against ourselves,” said Davis, now 62 and at third place, a fourth, a fifth, three at sixth place, a seventh and two at living in San Antonio, where he just retired after working 34 years as a high eighth place. school athletic coordinator there. “Only one guy in each event could go to the nationals, but those guys got very well-prepared by the people he faced Danosi was still the coach in 1975 when WSU finally broke through and in practice every day. We knew that if we just worked hard, we wouldn’t claimed its first national title, and also was there for three more in 1979, ’80 lose. We would win the national championship.” and ’82. Zelkowski, 58, works in office technology and coaches fencing in Livonia “He was one of the key men who built the foundation of fencing at Wayne with Pezza, his former WSU teammate. “We were just that good. We really State,” Pezza said. “He was from Hungary and came here after the Russian were,” he said. “We kicked everybody’s backsides.” invasion in 1956. He really knew the sport, and because of his heritage, he could recruit internationally. “He had quite a command, quite a presence. He A lot of time has passed since then. The years, now having turned into was like an army general. He was known as ‘The Maestro.’ ” decades, have helped crystallize for the former WSU fencers just how special that period was. USA Fencing Hall of Famer Aladar Kogler was coach for one year, in 1983, and won the national title, then former fencer Pezza took over and guided WSU to the “It didn’t dawn on me until much, much later what we accomplished,” Davis titles in 1984 and ’85, giving the school four consecutive crowns. said. “We were very strong and very talented.”

A FENCING DYNASTY 2019 WINTER WARRIOR WITHIN 7

TOP 100 ACHIEVEMENTS OF 2018

1. NCAA President Dr. Mark Emmert was the guest speaker for W Day health were initiated. 38. Women's golf was nationally ranked for the first time in program culminating our 100 year anniversary. history and qualified for its first NCAA Tournament in just its fourth year 21. The outdoor tennis courts were repaired, re-surfaced and of existence. 2. Athletics set an all-time record for annual revenue with $1,838,726 upgraded. raised. It was the fifth consecutive year that number exceeded one 39. Baseball pitcher Jared Tobey was voted to the D2CCA Second Team All- million and brought the 18-year total to $20,125,270. Donor support 22. Over 3,400 high school students visited WSU camps and clinics. Region and was named to the ABCA/Rawlings All-Midwest Region Team, reached a record with 983 supporters. while infielder JT Conti earned NCBWA Second Team All-Region accolades. 23. WSU athletics social media continued to increase on all platforms: 3. The federally reported Academic Success Rate (ASR) for WSU Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and YouTube. The re-designed web 40. Baseball qualified for the GLIAC Tournament for the 11th student-athletes was seventy-eight (78%) percent. That number paged had 1,997,656 page views marking the 15th consecutive year consecutive season. represents the graduation rate for all WSU student-athletes. that number has exceeded 1,500,000. According to main campus, 11% of all WSU media contact came through athletics. 41. Dustin Carlin, Blake Mazur, Manny Mendoza and Greg Webber 4. A school-record 46 student-athletes recorded a perfect 4.0 term GPA received membership into the National Football Foundation's Hampshire for the Fall 2018 semester. In addition, 74 percent of the student- 24. The National Association of Collegiate Marketing Administrators Honor Society, while Drew Dowding was named a NFF Campbell Trophy athletes had a term GPA of at least 3.0., and every team had a term (NACMA) recognized WSU with three awards (across all three NCAA Semifinalist, which honors the best football scholar-athletes. GPA of no less than 3.05. Divisions): Silver for promotional football schedule; Bronze in digital promotion; and Bronze in single game promotion. 42. The baseball program hosted the Ninth Annual Alan Trammell and 5. For the fifth year in a row, student-athletes volunteered over 10,000 Lance Parrish Camps. (10,539) community service hours across a spectrum of outreach 25. Added "Jump Forward," a compliance software package to activities bringing the seven-year total to 71,169 hours. supplement NCAA tracking and reporting. 43. Shannon Wilson became the 17th women's basketball player in the 44-year history of the program to score at least 1,000 points. She 6. The women's swimming and diving program won its 11th GLIAC 26. Senior fencer Ziad Elsissy and senior track hurdler Karrington Seals finished her career fifth all-time with 1,228 points. Championship in the last 13 years. were selected as WSU Student-Athletes of the Year. 44. The men's swimming and diving program finished 14th at the 7. The new 11,500-square foot Athletic Performance Center opened 27. The Division II Athletic Directors Association recognized a school- NCAA Championships marking the 18th straight year the squad has which includes 24 inlaid rack platforms, 37 individual pieces of record 94 WSU student-athletes with the Academic Achievement finished in the top 18 at nationals. Earning First Team All-America equipment, three offices for full-time staff, a conference room, Award for the 2017-18 school year. Eligible student-athletes must recognition were Dima Drobnych, Sasha Palazzo, Rasmus Olsen restrooms, and a refueling/nutrition station. have a cumulative grade point average of 3.5 or higher and have and Ryan Katulski (200 medley relay and 400 medley relay); Joao completed four semesters of college classwork. Martimbianco Ribeiro (400 IM); Drobnych (100 back and 200 back); 8. Ziad Elsissy was the Division 1 national runner-up in the men's saber and Palazzo (100 breast). at the NCAA Championships for the second straight year to earn First 28. In a three-month long NCAA national outreach program titled Team All-American honors. He finished second at the NCAA Midwest Helper Helper, WSU finished fourth in the country. 45. The football program had seven graduate students on its 2018 Regionals after winning the Midwest Fencing Conference saber title. roster, the second-most in NCAA Division II. 29. The women's basketball locker room was renovated as a result of 9. Women's tennis won its second GLIAC Tournament title in the last donor support. 46. Three members of the women's outdoor track and field program five years, and automatically qualified for the NCAA Tournament. It earned USTFCCCA All-Region honors. They were Jessie Kluz (High Jump), will be WSU's 11th NCAA Tournament appearance in the last 15 years. 30. Football defensive back Kyle Toth was voted to the CoSIDA Anjelica Peppers (Hammer) and Karrington Seals (100m Hurdles). Academic All-American First Team, while fencer Ziad Elsissy was a 10. In the Winter 2018 term, 40 student-athletes recorded a 4.0 Second Team Academic All-American. Swimmer Makayla Myers was 47. The new entrance connecting Matthaei and the Athletic semester GPA with 72 percent of all student-athletes with a 3.000 GPA selected to the CoSIDA Academic At-Large All-America Third Team. Performance Center (Weight Room) celebrated the Medal of Honor and or better. some of its recipients while the entire backdrop of the football stadium 31. Baseball's Ryan Mergener was named the winner of the GLIAC's lists every Medal of Honor recipient. 11. For their support and recognition of student athletes, the Troy Berry Award for character, leadership, and integrity. Mergener and department celebrated the naming of the Doris J. and Donald L. track's Karrington Seals were honored as GLIAC Commissioner's Award 48. Baseball student-athletes Brad Baldwin, JT Conti, Justin Kelly and Duchene, Sr. Athletic Facility formerly the Multipurpose Indoor Facility. recipients for academic and athletic excellence. Jared Tobey were voted to the All-GLIAC First Team, while Patrick Adams and Taylor Horn earned Second Team All-GLIAC honors. Tristen Jorah and 12. Medal of Honor recipient (Korean War) and graduate of Wayne 32. Ashley Defrain was named GLIAC Women's Cross Country Hunter Brown were named to the All-GLIAC Honorable Mention team. State, Robert E. Simanek was the guest of honor at the annual Freshman of the Year, and also received First-Team All-GLIAC honors, Academic Luncheon. while Jackie Feist earned Second Team All-GLIAC accolades. Both 49. Football student-athletes Israel Helms, Anthony Pittman and Defrain and Feist earned All-Region honors for placing in the top 25 at Tommy Richardson were voted to the All-GLIAC First Team, while James 13. Athletics unveiled the two tier press box and chair back seating at the NCAA Midwest Regional meet. Hill, Greg McDade, Preston Pelham and Darece Roberson, Jr. were Baseball's Harwell Facility. selected to the Second Team. Derrick Coleman, Leon Eggleston, Tieler 33. Bryanna Kressler was voted GLIAC Softball Freshman of the Year Houston, Shane Hynes, Kyle Lewis and Kyle Toth were named to the 14. Gary Bryce became the fourth NCAA softball coach in history and First Team All-GLIAC. Hannah McClounie and Ashley Messina were All-GLIAC Honorable Mention team. (any division) to coach 2,000 games. He also earned his 500th GLIAC selected to the All-GLIAC Second Team, while Megan Guitar and Rainey regular-season victory. Psenicka were named to the Honorable Mention All-GLIAC Team. 50. Men's basketball student-athlete Chuck Key was selected to the All- GLIAC First Team, while Ronald Booth and Marcus Moore both earned 15. The men's tennis program advanced to the second round of the NCAA 34. Alison (Allen) Ortega, Catherine Leix, Joe Long, Josh Renel, Andrey All-GLIAC Second team recognition. Moore was also named to the GLIAC Tournament and finished the season ranked fourth in Midwest Region Seryy and S. Gary Spicer, Sr. were inducted into the WSU Athletics Hall All-Defensive Team. and 43rd nationally. Mats Westkamp was ranked 57th nationally in of Fame. singles, and 33rd nationally in doubles with partner Niklas Karcz. 51. Men's golfer Brendan Seys earned D2 PING All-Region honors 35. Karrington Seals was honored as an All-American at both the after being selected to the All-GLIAC First Team. Kyle Rybicki and Grant 16. Men's golf qualified for the NCAA Tournament for the 12th time in Indoor (10th in 60m hurdles) and Outdoor (6th in 100m hurdles) Haefner collected Second Team All-GLIAC honors. the last 15 years. national championships. 52. Men's tennis student-athletes Mats Westkamp and Niklas Karcz 17. Men's Basketball won the GLIAC South Division. 36. Joao Martimbianco Ribeiro was selected Co-GLIAC Male Swimmer were voted to the All-GLIAC First Team, while Griffin Mertz and Taylor of the Year. Other student-athlete champions at the conference meet Vane earned Second Team All-GLIAC honors. Harvey Reed was named to 18. Karrington Seals was a National Semifinalist for the Wooden were Dima Drobnych, Sasha Palazzo, Rasmus Olsen and Ryan Katulski the Honorable Mention Team. Bryan Morrow was selected GLIAC Coach Citizenship Cup and was a nominee for the NCAA Woman of the Year (200 Medley Relay); Joao Martimbianco Ribeiro (400 IM); Olsen (100 of the Year for the second time. award. She was also selected by the NCAA to be one of three Division Fly); Drobnych, Palazzo, Olsen and Tyler Roshak (400 Medley Relay); II student-athletes nationally to appear in the "Day in the Life of" and Leonardo de Oliveira (1650 Free). 53. Freshman cross country runner Ethan Byrnes earned Second Team promotional campaign. All-GLIAC honors by placing 17th at the conference championships. 37. The following were all GLIAC title holders at the Women's Byrnes also earned Midwest All-Region accolades with his 17th-place 19. Baseball head coach Ryan Kelley earned his 300th career victory. Swimming and Diving Championships: Lezlie Bueno Estrada, finish at the NCAA Regional meet. Kelley, who has completed 10 seasons as head coach, was also named Haley Groteler, Aliza Durack and Makayla Myers (200 Free Relay); the 2018 Team Detroit Tigers Coach of the Year. Ashlen Michalski, Jia Yi Koh, Groteler and Bueno Estrada (400 54. Hailey Richardson was named to the Volleyball All-GLIAC First Team, Medley Relay); Koh (100 Breast); Groteler (200 Fly); and Koh, Emily and Ellie Rodriguez received Second Team Honors. Kamryn Duffield was 20. As part of the department's student-welfare initiatives, a sports Marginean, Myers and Estrada (400 Free Relay). Jia Yi Koh was named to the All-GLIAC Honorable Mention Team. psychologist was added, programs in sexual awareness and violence named GLIAC Women's Swimming Freshman of the Year, and Sean were presented, seminar in Title IX, NCAA gender equity platform Peters was named the GLIAC Women's Coach of the Year for the 55. Women's basketball player Shannon Wilson was voted to the representative was offered, drug/alcohol education and nutritional 10th time. All-GLIAC First Team, while Nastassja Chambers was selected to the

8 2019 WINTER WARRIOR WITHIN TOP 100 ACHIEVEMENTS 2018

TOP 100 ACHIEVEMENTS OF 2018

All-GLIAC Second Team. Ja'Nae Williams was named to the GLIAC 72. The women's track and field squad was honored by the USTFCCCA 85. Nine women's basketball student-athletes received GLIAC All-Academic All-Defensive Team. with an All-Academic Team award after posting a 3.56 grade-point honors. Named to the All-Academic Excellence Team were Alex Matus, average for the academic year. Lauren Bohn, Kierra Johnson, Lyndsey Matus, Jessica Murphy, Sara Ruhstorfer, Amber Stephens and 56. Women's fencer Pati Palczynska was named to the All-Midwest Shanice Leach and Karrington Seals received USTFCCCA All-Academic Shannon Wilson. Earning GLIAC All-Academic Team recognition were Fencing Conference Second Team, while Mycah Slade and Despina recognition. Payton Birchmeier, Nastassja Chambers and India Hawkins. Tsitlakidou earned Honorable Mention All-MFC accolades. 73. Both cross country teams received USTFCCCA Team All-Academic 86. Ten (10) women's golfers earned GLIAC All-Academic recognition. 57. Brooke Busse, Alexandra Lee and Anastassia Lee earned Honorable honors. The women's squad had two individuals recognized (Teresa Named to the Academic All-Excellence Team were Rylee George, Josie Mention All-GLIAC, the first such honors for the women's golf program. Diehl and Emma Willett), while the men's squad had one honoree Kurosky, Anastassia Lee, Chloe Luyet, Courtney Morton, Amanda Noakes (Nico Trevino). and Meredith Weidner. Earning GLIAC All-Academic Team honors were 58. Dasha Kuznetsova was voted to the Women's Tennis All-GLIAC Alexandra Lee, Shannon McNamara and Nikki Mollohan. First Team, while Laura Cazacu and Linda Liong earned Second Team 74. Both the men's and women's swimming and diving teams were All-Conference honors. Khadija Da-Silva was named to the All-GLIAC named CSCAA D2 Scholar All-America Teams for both the Winter 2018 87. Eleven (11) members of the women's swimming and diving squad Honorable Mention Team. and Fall 2018 semesters. received GLIAC All-Academic recognition. Named to the All-Academic Excellence Team were Meghan Lamb, Elizabeth Maraskine, Ashlen 59. Earning All-GLIAC honors at the women's indoor track and field 75. The entrance wall (soffit) to the Matthaei was re-designed Michalski, Makayla Myers, Mia Teifer and Emma Weber. Earning championships were Karrington Seals (1st in 60m hurdles); Shanice featuring Detroit's historical landmarks and how the City's role as the Academic All-GLIAC honors were Lezlie Bueno Estrada, Hannah Leach (1st in Triple Jump); Dazmonique Carr (3rd in 400m); and Jessie arsenal of democracy. Davenport, Ellie Dean, Tai Furnari and Delayni Kornak-Kotarba. Kluz (3rd in High Jump). 76. Twenty (20) Baseball student-athletes received Academic All-GLIAC 88. Five women's tennis players earned GLIAC All-Academic recognition. 60. Earning All-GLIAC honors at the women's outdoor track and recognition. Named to the GLIAC All-Academic Excellence Team were Irena van Meer was named to the GLIAC All-Academic Excellence Team, field championships were Karrington Seals (1st in 100m hurdles, Hunter Brown, Nolan Dill, Richard Hovde, Ryan Mergener, Josh Nelson, while Astrid Ciellza, Dasha Kuznetsova, Linda Liong and Stephanie and 200 in long jump); Dazmonique Carr (3rd in 400m); the 4x400 Devin Rose, Troy Saruna and Jared Tobey. Earning GLIAC All-Academic Stamate were named to the GLIAC All-Academic Team. relay quartet of Carr, Jordan Baker, Courtney Hewitt and Jayla honors were Patrick Adams, Brad Baldwin, Brendan Bilkovic, JT Conti, Fleming (3rd); Jessica Kluz (3rd in Triple Jump); and Lauren Bohn Nick Cowen, Zach Girard, Taylor Horn, Tristen Jorah, Dillon McInerney, 89. Fifteen (15) members of the women's indoor track and field (3rd in hammer). Jack Schmidt, Michael Toth and Brendan Wetmore. squad earned GLIAC All-Academic honors. Named to the All-Academic Excellence Team were Jordan Baker, Haley Boccomino, Alexis Brown, 61. To better serve publics at a variety of events, the new football food 77. WSU had a school-record 19 football student-athletes on the Teresa Diehl, Jackie Feist, Rachel Kloski, Shanice Leach, Grace Mendoza pavilion opened. GLIAC All-Academic Excellence Team and 37 total GLIAC All-Academic and Karrington Seals. Earning GLIAC All-Academic recognition were Honorees. Named to the All-Academic Excellence Team were Jake 62. The baseball program received the ABCA Team Academic Lauren Bohn, Dazmonique Carr, McKenzie Hughes, Kierra Johnson, Jessie AmRhein, Chris Carter, Stephen Charron, Drew Dowding, Corey Kluz and Amy Vangieson. Excellence Award after posting a 3.38 team GPA. The team has earned Ester, Randy Garvin, Paul Graham, Shane Holler, Cooper Kukal, Taylor the award all three seasons since it was introduced in 2016. McCarty, Lane Potter, Justin Rau, Ian Sharp, Logan Smith, Ryan 90. Seventeen (17) members of the women's outdoor track and field 63. Nick Mutebi was named to the NABC Honors Court, the NABC Smith, Spencer Stephenson, Reid Thompson, Kyle Toth and Charlie team received GLIAC All-Academic honors. Named to the All-Academic Give Back Team, as well as a 2018 Arthur Ashe Jr. Sports Scholar. Nick Younger. Earning Academic All-GLIAC honors were Brady Beedon, Excellence Team were Jordan Baker, Haley Boccomino, Alexis Brown, Mutebi was selected as one of only 24 interns at the NCAA, while Luke Bevilacqua, Andy Bielecki, Will Butler, Leon Eggleston, Steven Dazmonique Carr, Leah Coonrod, Teresa Diehl, Jackie Feist, Rachel Deionte Nicholas was selected as the GLIAC representative to the NCAA. Glenn, Luke Ketterman, Christian Klink, Donte McClure, Greg McDade, Kloski, Shanice Leach, Grace Mendoza and Karrington. Earning GLIAC DeOntay Moffett, Deiontae Nicholas, Preston Pelham, Nick Poterack, All-Academic recognition were Lauren Bohn, Courtney Hewitt, McKenzie 64. The men's golf team was honored by the GCAA with an 18Birdies Anthony Pittman, Darece Roberson, Jr., Terry Sanders and Samson Tai. Hughes, Kierra Johnson, Jessie Kluz and Amy Vangieson. Team Academic Award after recording a 3.32 team GPA during the 2017-18 academic year. It was the third consecutive year the men's 78. Three men's basketball student-athletes received GLIAC All- 91. The women's cross country squad had seven GLIAC All-Academic golf program was recognized. Both Crawford McKinlay and Nikolas Academic recognition. Nick Mutebi was on the Excellence Team, while honorees, which tied a program high over the last 17 years. Named to Senkowski were named Srixon/Cleveland Golf All-America Scholars. Chuck Key and George Spencer were named to the Academic Team. the GLIAC All-Academic Excellence Team were Lyndsey Braman, Teresa Diehl, Jackie Feist, Kiersten Reeves, Emma Willett and Gabbi Willett. 65. Dima Drobnych, Ryan Katulski, Rasmus Olsen, Joao Martimbianco 79. Thirteen (13) men's golfers received GLIAC All-Academic honors. Earning GLIAC All-Academic recognition was Ani Purcell. Ribeiro and Tyler Roshak were named to the CSCAA Scholar All- Named to the All-Academic Excellence Team were Grant Haefner, Nazir American First Team, while Khayman Jones received CSCAA Honorable Jairazbhoy, Collin Kolbe, Nikolas Senkowski and Dexter Wilson. Named 92. The department added four fully-funded endowments: Don Baylor, Mention Scholar All-American accolades. to the GLIAC All-Academic Squad were Austin Alexander, Brett Boes, Alan Trammell, Lance Parrish and Rob/Pamela Fournier. Jason Brandt, George Cornwell, Garrett Freismuth, Jesse Hogan, Carson 66. Makayla Myers was named to the CSCAA Scholar All-American First McKinlay and Brendan Meadows. 93. Jessica Murphy (women's basketball), Nick Mutebi (men's Team, while Ellie Dean, Meghan Lamb and Kate Svisco received CSCAA basketball) and Troy Saruna (baseball) were recognized on the Mike Ilitch Honorable Mention Scholar All-American accolades. 80. Nine members of the men's swimming and diving program School of Business 25 Under 25 list. received GLIAC All-Academic honors. Named to the Excellence Team 67. The men's tennis squad was recognized as an All-Academic were Ahmed Ahmed, Ryan Katulski, Joao Martimbianco Ribeiro and 94. The fencing locker room at MHRFC was completed to include Team by the ITA after the team recorded a 3.77 GPA for the 2017-18 Joe Trohimczyk. Named to the GLIAC All-Academic squad were Dima individual wooden lockers for both men and women. Drobnych, Nate Michna, Rasmus Olsen, Nick Quigley and Tyler Roshak. academic year. The seven Warriors to receive ITA Scholar-Athlete 95. Softball catcher Brooke Turkalj and women's tennis player Andreea recognition were Nicholas Ang, Niklas Karcz, Griffin Mertz, Jason Potter, Mitrache were voted to the CoSIDA Academic All-District First Team. Harvey Reed, Derek Sammons and Taylor Vane. 81. The men's tennis program had six student-athletes (Nicholas Ang, Griffin Mertz, Jason Potter, Harvey Reed, Derek Sammons and Taylor 96. Senior volleyball student-athlete Hailey Richardson achieved the 68. The softball squad received Easton/NFCA Academic Team honors Vane) receive GLIAC All-Academic Excellence team honors, and one (Mats Westkamp) on the GLIAC All-Academic Team. career double-double with 1,171 kills and 1,176 digs. Senior Ellie after posting a 3.483 team grade-point average for the 2017-18 Rodriguez finished second in school history with 1,653 digs. academic year. Kylee Barrett, Rachelle Clayton, Megan Guitar, Hailey Lazarek, Kristen Lucas, Jamie MacNeil, Ashley Messina, Rose Myers, 82. The softball program had eleven (11) student-athletes receive GLIAC All-Academic recognition, including eight (Kylee Barrett, 97. Visits to the Mort Harris Recreation and Fitness Center increased Rainey Psenicka, Kelsey Ramus and Brooke Turkalj were recognized as to 333,317, while hosting a number of ancillary events including the Easton Scholar-Athletes. Rachelle Clayton, Hailey Lazarek, Kristen Lucas, Jamie MacNeil, Ashley Messina, Kelsey Ramus and Brooke Turkalj) on the GLIAC All-Academic University's 150-year celebration. Active club sports memberships at MHRFC nearly doubled with the addition of: equestrian, rowing, 69. The volleyball team was recognized with the AVCA Team Academic Excellence Team. Named to the GLIAC All-Academic Team were Emma Adams, Megan Guitar and Hannah McClounie. men's volleyball, and Quidditch. In addition, four new intramural Award after recording a 3.67 cumulative GPA, which ranked in the top sports were added. 25 of all Division II programs. WSU has been honored in five of the last six seasons. 83. Five men's cross country runners received GLIAC All-Academic recognition. Alex Krasuski, Ryan Mangulabnan and Allen Swaidan 98. The men's basketball program had three 1,000-point scorers in 70. The women's golf team was the recipient of a 2017-18 WGCA were named to the GLIAC All-Academic Excellence Team, while Brennan Ronald Booth, Chuck Key and Marcus Moore. All-Scholar Team GPA Award as the squad finished 18th nationally with Brothers and Dillon Smith earned GLIAC All-Academic Team honors. 99. Jared Tobey, who earned a bachelor's degree from the Mike Ilitch a 3.635 GPA. Rylee George, Josie Kurosky, Anastassia Lee and Meredith School of Business, was drafted by the Detroit Tigers and began his Weidner received WGCA All-American Scholar recognition. 84. Eleven (11) members of the volleyball program received GLIAC All-Academic honors. The eight student-athletes named to the GLIAC professional career in the Tigers organization. 71. The women's tennis team was recognized as an All-Academic Team All-Academic Excellence Team were Natalie Breault, Julia Malewicz, 100. The Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC) hosted the by the ITA after posting a 3.26 team GPA. In addition, Astrid Ciellza, Liz Claire McWilliams, Alexa Methner, Christa Raicevich, Hailey Richardson, inaugural Golden Ws Awards Show. Ghellere, Andreea Mitrache and Irena van Meer received ITA Scholar- Haley Tenelshof and Taylor Wagner. Selected to the GLIAC All-Academic Athlete recognition. Team were Grace Frazee, Ellie Rodriguez and Lauren VanderWal.

TOP 1OO ACHIEVEMENTS OF 2018 2019 WINTER WARRIOR WITHIN 9 Athletic Director's Honor Roll Student-Athlete (Term GPA 3.5+) Baseball: Jacob Badalamenti, Brendan Bilkovic, Josh Blaszczak, Hunter Brown, CJ Drogosch, Jacob Finkbeiner, Richard Hovde, Robert Iacobelli*, Tristen Jorah, Academic Success Matt Krutsch, Michael MacLean, Dillon McInerney, Noah Miller, Max Moon *, Joey Muzljakovich, Josh Nelson, Jack Schmidt, Brendan Wetmore The student-athletes at Wayne State University continue to excel in the classroom. A school record fourty-six (46) Men's Basketball: LJ DeWolf , E.J. Haralson, Javon Henderson, Jacob Joubert student-athletes recorded a perfect 4.00 term GPA with Women's Basketball: Sam Cherney*, Grace George, India Hawkins, Alex 74 percent of Warrior student-athletes receiving above a Matus, Lyndsey Matus, Alexis Miller*, Tori Perez*, Anna Ruhstorfer, Paige 3.00 for the recently completed Fall semester. The entire Villemure, Ja'Nae Williams student-athlete population posted a 3.32 term GPA, with a Men's Cross Country: Tanner Blaney, Mitchell Chabot, Alex Krasuski, Zahid cumulative GPA for all student-athletes at 3.30. Salodawala, Dillon Smith, Allen Swaidan, Tyler Travis Women's Cross Country: Miranda Banks, Lyndsey Braman, Teresa Diehl*, Kiersten Reeves, Emma Willett, Gabbi Willett* "These student athletes underscore the primary Men's Fencing: Dylan Boyle*, David DeClark, Pranav Gopalakrishnan, objectives of the University and should be acknowledged Brendan Johnson*, Nader Rayyan, Ahmed Saleh along with our academic support group: Kim Clexton, Women's Fencing: Ellie Brenner*, Alyssa Hirsch, Sierra Jones, Brooklyn Theresa Arist, Dr. Laurel Whalen, Candice Howard, Kelsey Miller*, Pati Palczynska Meyers and Ashley Dsida. Those who are looking for an Football: Jake AmRhein, Chuckie Anthony, Tiroca Battle, Brady Beedon, Luke example of how academic support services and dedicated Bevilacqua, Andy Bielecki, Chris Carter, Stephen Charron *, Drew Dowding, student-athletes can achieve success, need look no Corey Ester, Randy Garvin*, Steven Glenn, Paul Graham, Blake Grice-Brunson, Shane Holler, Shane Hynes, Nolan Kimmey, Matt Krause, Cooper Kukal, Dakota further than the athletic department." Kupp, Aidan Martini, Jacob Mass*, Taylor McCarty, Landin Mitchell, Lamar Namou, Deiontae Nicholas, Noah Nicklin, Anthony Pittman, Lane Potter, Justin ROB FOURNIER, DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS Rau, Ali Scheib, Ian Sharp, Logan Smith*, Ryan Smith*, Demetrius Stinson, Quentin Taylor, Reid Thompson, Dalton Thorner, Kyle Toth, Julius Wilkerson, Joe Wright III, D.J. Zezula ACADEMIC QUICK FACTS Men's Golf: Austin Alexander, Anthony Bolden, Grant Haefner, Collin Kolbe, JJ Lewis*, Carson McKinlay, Brendan Meadows FALL 2018 Women's Golf: Imogen Courtney, Rylee George*, Josie Kurosky, Katie Logan, 46 Daniela Moreno*, Courtney Morton, Meredith Weidner PERFECT 4.0 Softball: Alexis Abruzzo*, Emma Adams, Paige Ameel, Raechel Carroll*, OVERALL Rachelle Clayton, Monica Daly*, Megan Guitar, Bryanna Kressler, Jamie GPA A+ SEMESTERS MacNeil, Hannah McClounie, Ashley Messina, Rose Myers, Rainey Psenicka* SCHOOL RECORD Men's Swimming & Diving: Ahmed Ahmed, Noah Barstad, Ryan Katulski, Sam Krahn*, Kyle Lovas, Joao Martimbianco Ribeiro, Emil Nkemdilim- 3.32 STUDENT- Dantzler, Stewart Nowinski, Chris Spencer*, Chris Westgate ATHLETES 74% Women's Swimming & Diving: Julia Brunner*, Lezlie Bueno Estrada *, FOR ALL ABOVE 3.00 Ellie Dean*, Tai Furnari, Amanda Hurchalla, Jia Yi Koh, Delayni Kornak- STUDENT- FOR THE TERM Kotarba, Elizabeth Krawczyk, Allison Lennig*. Elizabeth Maraskine*, Ashlen ATHLETES Michalski*, Sophie Montesanti, Marjorie Myers, Kate Svisco, Adrianna Waack*, Emma Weber*

10 2019 WINTER WARRIOR WITHIN STUDENT-ATHLETE ACADEMIC SUCCESS Men's Tennis: Nicholas Ang*, Niklas Karcz, Griffin Mertz, Donovan Nguyen*, Women's Golf: Anastassia Lee Jason Potter, Pierre Renaudie*, Derek Sammons, David Solar, Taylor Vane* Softball: Presly Buchanan, Emily Dodge, Kassidy Moonen, Brooke Turkalj Women's Tennis: Laura Cazacu*, Irena van Meer, Dasha Kuznetsova, Astrid Ciellza, Linda Liong, Stephanie Stamate. Men's Swimming & Diving: an DiCerbo, Tristan Fraley, Abdelrahman Hassan, Jake Kiska, Franz Mueller, Rasmus Olsen, Sasha Palazzo, Grant Porter, Tanner Women's Track & Field: Yasmine Affes, Isabella Bertolini, Alexis Brown*, Robertson, Jack Rogers, Reid Schoenherr Aliyah McDonald, Amy Vangieson, Jada Weatherspoon Women's Swimming & Diving: Ashleigh Allen, Sydney Balk, Hannah Berich, Volleyball: Natalie Breault*, Kamryn Duffield, Grace Frazee, Julia Malewicz, Aliza Durack, Mia Teifer Claire McWilliams, Alexa Methner*, Nicole Pollzzie, Christa Raicevich, Hailey Richardson*, Ellie Rodriguez*, Halle Shell, Haley Tenelshof*, Lauren Men's Tennis: None VanderWal*, Taylor Wagner* Women's Tennis: Tanja Skalda Coach's Honor Roll Women's Track & Field: Lauren Bohn, Jayla Fleming, Arionne Fowlkes, (Term GPA 3.0-3.49) Teanna McCuaig, Nijah Russell, Izzy Taylor Baseball: Nick Cowen, Brennan Cox, Troy Daring Jr., Ryan Foley, Zach Girard, Volleyball: Emily Shelton Davis Graham, Max Hendricks, Justin Kelly, Rudy Ramirez, Nate Roede, Chris Tanderys, Brett Zimmerman. * Designates an individual with a 4.00 Term GPA Men's Basketball: Latin Davis, Jr., Karim Murray, Darian Owens-White, Tristan Wilson Women's Basketball: Daejia Hill, Jessica Murphy Men's Cross Country: Cameron Bourgeois, George Drallos, Jack Lacasse, Ryan Mangulabnan, Alex Put, Nico Trevino Women's Cross Country: Jackie Feist, Ani Purcell, Kennadi Rankin, Chloe Wandell Men's Fencing: Henry Kisthardt, Alex Prendergast, Gustav Rossner. Women's Fencing: Alisa Kishta, Natalie Magda Football: Griffen Best, Will Butler, Chase Churchill, Leon Eggleston, Israel Helms, Athletic Jones, Luke Ketterman, Kofe Kimbrell, Daniel Knight, Kyle Lewis, Brendan Madigan, Josh Mayberry, Greg McDade, John-Paul Morris, Preston Pelham, Cameron Rogers, Terry Sanders, Kevin Skonning, Spencer Stephenson, Samson Tai, Justin Tockstein, Ray'Jon Williams- Jackson, Charlie Younger GRADUATION RATE FOR ALL Men's Golf: Brett Boes, George Cornwell, Nikolas Senkowski, Brendan Seys, STUDENT-ATHLETES Jack Tucker 78% (ACADEMIC SUCCESS RATE) "It is remarkable what our student athletes do in the classroom," stated WSU Director of Athletics Rob Fournier. "With every team having a term GPA no less than a 3.05 GPA, and 74 percent of our student-athletes with no less than a 3.00 GPA, that is exceptional. Those academic achievements are complemented by a record forty-six (46) student athletes with a perfect 4.00 GPA." ROB FOURNIER, DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS

STUDENT-ATHLETE ACADEMIC SUCCESS 2019 WINTER WARRIOR WITHIN 11 WSU Athletics Adopts 19 Families for the Holidays The Wayne State University Department of Athletics and its student-athletes adopted 19 families from Noble Elementary and Middle School (K-8) for the holiday season.

The items were delivered to the families at the school on Dec. 17th.

Each one of the 18 teams participated and the families ranged from one to five children. The items included toys, clothing and sporting goods for the kids, and household items and gift cards for the parents.

12 2019 WINTER WARRIOR WITHIN ATHLETICS ADOPTS 19 FAMILIES Toth Earns CoSIDA Academic All-America First Team Honors Wayne State University redshirt junior safety Kyle Toth (Hudsonville, Mich.) was voted to the CoSIDA Academic All-America First Team.

Toth becomes WSU's first football Academic All-American since Hall of Fame inductee Josh Renel was so honored in 2011.

Wayne State had four football Academic All-Americans in the 1970s – Hall of Fame inductee Gary Schultz in 1971, Ken Russell also in 1971, Walt Stasinski in 1972, and Robert Rogers in 1975.

Toth, who served as a team captain in 2018, was named to the Honorable Mention All-GLIAC Team. He tied-for-sixth in the GLIAC with two interceptions. Toth made 62 tackles (34 solo, 28 assisted), including two for loss during the 2018 campaign. He also contributed three pass break-ups and a blocked kick.

In his collegiate career, Toth has played in 30 games, while making 22 starts. He has 147 career tackles (90 solo, 57 assisted) with three interceptions and eight pass break-ups. Toth has three forced fumbles, made one fumble recovery, and has 4.5 tackles for loss.

Academically, he has earned a spot on the Athletic Director's Honor Roll (term GPA 3.5+) all seven semesters, including a 4.00 term GPA on four occasions. He is also a member of the Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC). Toth maintains a 3.84 cumulative grade-point average in Kinesiology.

TOTH EARNS CoSIDA ACADEMIC ALL -AMERICA | 2019 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE 2019 WINTER WARRIOR WITHIN 13

HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES

NAME, SPORT(S), INDUCTION YEAR Andrew R. Clark, Swimming, 1976 Ron Hammye, Basketball Coach, 2004 Thomas B. Adams, Football/Track, 1979 Michael J. Clark, Baseball, 1991 Casey (Hanes) Rammel, Softball, 2017 Randall Ahern, Golf, 1986 Shannon Clark (Maisano), Softball, 2013 Victor G. Hanson, Football/Contributor/Builder, 1980 Alison (Allen) Ortega, Softball, 2018 Elmer Coleman, Track, 1983 James Hayes, Tennis, 2002 Nick Allen, Cross Country, 2010 William Collins, Baseball/Basketball/Football, 1984 John M. Hazely, Football/Baseball, 1983 Albert Ament, Basketball, 2001 Ashley (Corriveau) Weaver, Swimming, 2019 Homer L. Heard, Track, 1997 Mark “Doc” Andrews, Media, 2005 John K. Cotton, Football, 1981 Neil Hick, Fencing, 2008 Paul Andrews, Contributor/Builder, 1993 David Croskey, Baseball, 2008 Chalmer G. Hixson, Athletic Director, 1983 Keith Anleitner, Football, 2007 Frank Cudillo, Football, 1990 Elaina Hogle, Swimming, 2016 Scott Armstrong, Basketball, 2006 Pearly (Cunningham) Armstrong, Basketball, 1998 David L. Holmes, Basketball/Football/Track/ Michaelene (Bachleda) Ruhl, Softball, 2003 Jennifer (Daniel) Coleman, Softball, 2006 Athletic Director, 1976 Naif Baidoon, Baseball, 2007 Istvan Danosi, Fencing, 1983 Michael G. Horn, Golf , 2001 Erika Barczak, Diving, 2014 Steve F. Danosi, Fencing, 1987 H. Grant Iler, Football/Basketball/Track, 1980 Edwin C. Barnett, Wrestling, 1997 Bruce P. Davis, Fencing, 1980 Nick Ingrao, Swimming, 2012 Anthony Bass, Baseball, 2019 J. Kenneth Doherty, Track, 1977 Bob Jackson, Tennis, 2005 Harald Bauder, Fencing, 2003 Leroy W. Dues, Track, 1977 Paul J. Janas, Baseball, 1995 David Beauvais, Football/Track, 1978 George Duncan, Basketball, 1981 Lori (Januszkiewicz) Sweeney, Basketball, 1997 Cauli Bedran, Swimming, 2016 Dante Dunn, Football, 2015 Cass Jawor, Golf, 1995 Joique Bell, Football, 2016 Craig Duppong, Football, 2010 Frank Jeney, Baseball, 2011 Gregory Benko, Fencing, 1990 Christian Erard, Swimming, 2011 Walter B. Jenkins, Football/Track, 1987 Frederick P. Bens, Football/Basketball, 1989 Newman H. Ertell, Football/Basketball, 1977 Amanda (Jennings) Pata, Softball, 2009 Sarah Berry, Softbal, 2014 Otis Evans, Basketball, 2004 Astrid Johannesen, Swimming, 1988 Ettore C. Bianchi, Fencing, 1999 Gina (Farkashazy) Weaver, Fencing, 1998 Art Johnson, Basketball, 2006 Gary M. Bice, Swimming, 1996 David C. Farris, Football, 1994 Eric Johnson, Golf, 2019 Lowell E. Blanchard, Track/Football, 1988 Sebastien Foka, Tennis, 2014 Monique Johnson, Basketball, 2008 Bruno Blanco, Swimming, 2013 Larry L. Fortner, Track, 1999 Paul Wesley Jones, Track, 1997 Greg Brecht, Baseball, 2004 Sara Franklin, Swimming, 2017 Elisa Joris, Volleyball, 2012 Wayne D. Brenkert, Football, 1988 James A. Gardner, Rowing, 1982 Kelly Kashmerick, Softball, 2009 Denise (Breslin) Gotham, Volleyball, 2001 Robert N. Gardner, Diving, 1989 Patricia A. Kent, Softball, 1995 Don Brown, Tennis, 2000 Anna Garina, Fencing, 2013 Dustin Kingston, Hockey, 2010 George R. Brown, Basketball/Track, 1983 George Gembis, Football, 1977 John L. Kline, Basketball/Track, 1979 Noah Brown, Jr, Basketball/Administrator, 2012 Joseph G. Gembis, Football, 1980 Goetz H. Klopfer, Track, 1984 Pierre Brown, Football, 2008 Lisa C. Gentry, Basketball, 1998 Robert Kloss, Baseball, 2000 Richard B. Brown, Cross Country/Track, 1991 Rodger George, Baseball, 2006 Carol (Krause) Lausman, Softball/Basketball, 2001 T. Richard “Dick” Brown, Football, 2006 Susan (Gierschick) Kopins, Diving, 2000 Byron L. Krieger, Fencing, 1976 Gini Bruce, Softball/Basketball/Volleyball, 2004 Sharon Gill, Tennis, 2017 Jakub Krochmalski, Fencing, 2012 Troy Burrell, Football, 2019 Joe Gough, Football, 2005 Rodney C. Kropf, Contributor/Builder, 1995 Paul Butcher, Football, 1997 Cynthia Goyette, Swimming, 1985 Kris Krzyminski, Basketball, 2014 Richard R. Byas, Jr, Football, 1987 Jack H. Gregory, Golf, 1994 Robert F. Langas, Football/Basketball, 1993 Wesley C. Carlos, Football, 1998 Patty (Grudzinski) Gergics, Softball, 2005 Ryan LaPensee, Baseball, 2016 Mary E. Carney, Basketball, 1988 David Guerrera, Hockey, 2009 Ian Larkin, Basketball, 2019 Nicholas Cherup, Football/Track, 1991 Robert Gunn, Basketball, 1985 Steve Lee, Football, 2013 Cassie Chetosky, Diving, 2017 Angelo Gust, Baseball/Football, 1994 Catherine Leix, Swimming, 2018

14 2019 WINTER WARRIOR WITHIN HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES OF ALL TIME

HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES

Marty Letzmann, Basketball, 2005 Kevin Ponticelli, Baseball/Football, 1994 Stephanie Stone, Basketball/Softball, 1993 John W. Lewis, Track, 1979 William A. Prew, Swimming, 1977 Paula K. Sweeney, Fencing, 1978 Russell Lightbody, Basketball/Football, 1978 Charles Primas, Basketball, 1976 Roxanne Szczesniak, Softball, 1996 Mark Limback, Baseball, 1999 Fred L. Prime, Jr., Basketball/Track, 1989 Bela W. Szentivanyi, Fencing, 1984 Richard G. Lisabeth, Football, 1984 Gordon A. Reck, Baseball, 1990 Elliot Tabron, Track, 2002 Delonda Little, Basketball, 2005 Irvin D. Reid, WSU President/Contributor, 2011 Catherine (Tanzini) Colarossi, Tennis, 2001 Joe Long, Football, 2018 Josh Renel, Football, 2018 Ronald Teasley, Baseball/Basketball, 1986 Richard Lowry, Football, 2002 Jack Rice, Tennis/Baseball/Football John Telford, Track, 1978 Robert R. Luby, Football/Track, 1993 Basketball, 1978 Bela de Tuscan, Fencing, 1982 Guy Lumsden, Swimming, 1981 Therone Richardson, Basketball, 1991 Allan Tolmich, Track, 1976 David Lutz, Swimming, 2011 Elbert Richmond, Football/Basketball, 1986 Halina (Tomska) Papp, Swimming, 1989 Leo S. Maas, Swimming/Baseball, 1982 Mitch Ritter, Football/Contributor/Builder, 2010 Yasemin (Topcu) , Fencing, 2009 Ken Madeja, Baseball, 2006 Donald Robinson, Track/Football, 1985 Christer Tour, Swimming, 2014 Gil Mains, Contributor/Builder, 1996 Mary Rogers, Basketball, 2003 Donald K. Urban, Football/Wrestling/ Rachelle (Malette) Christensen, Cross Country, 2015 Cliff Russell, Media, 2007 Track Golf, 2017 Bruno Marana, Football, 1992 Delbert W. Russell, Tennis, 1991 Brian VanGorder, Football, 2013 Fred Martus, Basketball, 1992 Laurence E. Russell, Football/Golf, 1988 A.J. Vaughn, Football, 1985 Donald Mason, Diving, 1998 Robert Ryland, Tennis, 1991 Joseph Verellen, Cross Country, 2012 Joel G. Mason, Football/Basketball, 1981 Paola Sacchetti, Fencing, 2006 Shelly (Vickery) Siegel, Cross Country, 2009 Bill Maul, Tennis/Basketball, 1987 Myron “Susie” Schecter, Basketball, 1980 Ebony Vincent, Basketball, 2014 Frank McBride, Track/Cross Country, 2002 Dacia (Schileru) Clark, Diving, 2000 Norman G. Wann, Tennis/Football, 1986 Donald McClellan, Swimming, 1990 Jack Schlesinger, Tennis, 1981 Richard B. Watson, Fencing, 1977 Donald McElroy, Track, 1983 Gerald (Jerry) Schnelker, Football/Track, 1996 Jon Weisman, Baseball, 2015 John Miele, Baseball, 2008 Gary Schultz, Football, 2004 Leon Wheeler, Football/Basketball/Track, 1978 Lambros Milonas, Historian, 1996 Allison Scruggs-Tookes, Tennis, 1993 Robert C. “Doc” White, Training, 1989 Bryan Morrow, Tennis, 2003 W. Stanley Seitz, Track/Football, 1986 Leon F. Wingo, Track, 1999 Frederick A. Mulhauser, Tennis/Athletic Director, 1990 Andrey Seryy, Swimming, 2018 Robert F. Wingo, Track, 1982 Natalya Natyshak, Tennis, 2011 Carly Sevald, Diving, 2019 Michael Wiseman, Baseball, 2017 Michael Newsted, Baseball, 2007 Jerry Sevick, Football/Basketball/Track, 1992 Frederick L. Wolcott, Baseball/Basketball, 1988 Courtney Noble, Softball, 2008 George B. Sherma, Business Manager, 1980 Margaret Woodbridge, Swimming, 1982 Dave Nowinski, Swimming, 2005 Doris Shimman, Swimming, 1985 Christopher M. Wouters, Baseball, 1999 Elizabeth A. O’Brien, Basketball/Tennis, 1996 Ernest Simon, Fencing, 2004 Lorenzo C. Wright, Track, 1976 James K. O’Hara, Football/Wrestling, 1994 Edward Skowneski, Jr., Football, 1987 Robert F. Wyman, Football, 1994 Jeanne Omelenchuk, Speed Skating, 1979 Billy Smith, Track, 1984 Molly Yetman, Softball, 2015 Ben J. Paolucci, Football, 1992 Jennifer (Smith) DenDooven, Softball, 2007 Jodi Young, Basketball, 2010 Rachel A. Parham, Volleyball, 1999 Mark H. Smith, Jr., Track, 1979 David Zelmanski, Baseball, 1994 Charlie Parker, Basketball, 2001 Sean Smith, Swimming, 2015 Slava Zingerman, Fencing, 2016 Jennifer Parks, Swimming, 1986 Robert Solomon, Basketball/Baseball, 1985 Victor A. Zucco, Football/Track, 1990 Janina (Parrott) Jacobs, Golf, 2000 Victor F. Spathelf, Track, 1981 Paul J. Pentecost, Athletic Publicity, 1989 Edward O. Spence, Track/Football, 1979 Irving Petross, Track, 1982 S. Gary Spicer, Sr., Contributor, 2018 Christ Petrouleas, Administrator, 2003 Ashley St.Andrew, Swimming, 2016 Gil A. Pezza, Fencing, 1993 Jean Ann Stanicek, Tennis, 1998

HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES OF ALL TIME 2019 WINTER WARRIOR WITHIN 15 WEEK OF EVENTS Annual W Day Brunch April 13: Brunch will be served at 10 a.m. followed by a keynote speaker. In addition, the athletic department will recognize the women across the decades who have made a difference. April 15: Women Leaders in College Sports Networking Event

April 16: Visit the Mort Harris Recreation & Fitness Center beginning at 10 a.m. for its annual Health Fair. Vendors from a variety of businesses and organizations will be on hand to provide information and education April 17: Discuss and Dine with Sarah Axelson, Women Sport Foundation April 18: Academic Recognition Luncheon April 19: The Wayne State Athletic Department is collecting basic needs items including, but not limited to soap, socks, toothbrushes, toilet paper, feminine W Week Celebration products and deodorant for its annual Basic Needs Drive. In conjunction with Wayne WSUATHLETICS.COM/WWEEK Cares and Covenant House Michigan, the drive collects small toiletry items to make basic needs bags to distribute to students at Noble Elementary and Beautification of the School Project. If you would like to donate, please bring your items to the Matthaei Athletic Complex prior to April 19.

We want to remind you of what is acceptable when dealing with our current and prospective student athletes. First, it is important to determine if you must follow the rules surrounding a Are You A representative of athletics interest. You are considered a “Representative of Athletics Interest” or “booster” if you: • Are or have been a member of any organization promoting Wayne State University Athletics. Booster? • Have ever made a donation to the Athletic Department or any booster organization. Want more information? • Have ever assisted in evaluating or recruiting prospects. Contact Kelsey Meyers • Have ever helped to arrange or have provided employment to enrolled student-athletes, Assistant Athletics Director for prospects, to their parents or relatives. Compliance & NCAA Liaison • Participated in a Wayne State athletics program. 313.577.0590 • Once you become a representative or athletics interests, you retain this status FOREVER. [email protected] WSUATHLETICS.COM/BOOSTER Please keep in mind, it is possible to jeopardize a student-athlete’s eligibility with just one act of kindness! Please ask before you act.

16 2019 WINTER WARRIOR WITHIN CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION OF CHAMPIONS | COMPLIANCE CORNER W CLUB LEVELS NEW MEMBERSHIP LEVELS New Century Foundation* $10,000+ 2018-19 SEASON National Champions Club* $2,500 - $9,999 Support a student-athlete’s education Trumbull & Warren Club* Provide facility improvements $1,000 - $2,499 Warrior Within magazine Harwell Field Club* Invitations to special events* $750 - $999 Access pass to “W” Club hospitality tent/lounge* Tartar Field Club* Access to VIP Parking* $400 - $749 “W” Club auto window decal* Matthaei Club Tax deduction $250 - $399 * Only available at certain giving levels. 313 Club All contributions are tax-deductible to the fullest extent $50 - $249 allowed by law. *VIP hospitality access at home football Member benefits will start the monththe first gift is and basketball games. made and go through the proceeding 12 months and is renewable each year. HOW TO DONATE • Call (313) 577-0241 to make a credit/debit card donation or WSU Payroll Deduction • Send donation form or check to: Director of Development, 5101 John C. Lodge, 101 Matthaei, Detroit, MI 48202 • GiveHOW to athletics TO DONATE online at wsuathletics.com NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION U.S. POSTAGE PAID WARRIOR WITHIN DETROIT, MI 5101 John C. Lodge PERMIT NO. 3844 101 Matthaei Detroit, MI 48202

WE’LL SELL YOU THE WHOLE SEAT ... BUT YOU’LL ONLY NEED THE EDGE.

PUT YOUR NAME ON A CHAIRBACK SEAT AT HARWELL FIELD Reserve your name on a seat of your choice and be a permanent part of our baseball future. The new grandstands feature 240 stadium seats and a two-tier press box. Your commitment is tax deductible. $500 PER SEAT For more information, contact Lauren Lepkowski at 313.577.0241 or [email protected]. WSUATHLETICS.COM